Don't forget Deadeye Dick.Kurt Vonnegut
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Don't forget Deadeye Dick.Kurt Vonnegut
Slaughterhouse Five by Kurt Vonnegut. I can't believe I'm the first to recommend this!
It feels good to read again after so many months of not being able to.
"Invisible Man" is chock-full of so many relevant and deep social issues, it's hard to list them here. But, mainly what drew me back to it was the over-arching theme of identity construction, deconstruction, and reconstruction, lol. I can really resonate with having an identity that is assumed for you and created for you largely by others, and then, once older, recognizing this and going about trying to change it.
Like, just having all this outside stuff be a part of you, but it's super hard to access the "inside stuff," the real you.
Sorry, don't mean to go on-&-on. I LOVED "Go Tell It On the Mountain" because it was the first time I read about a character who shared my religious background and upbringing. The protagonist is a "PK" (preacher's kid) who is struggling to find his voice amidst others in his family, church, city, & country.
And, to answer your question tolstoytherapy, for me, what tends to trigger me is, honestly, books that deal with sexuality more than anything else. Like, I find great comfort in reading about characters/real people who struggle and, ultimately, persevere/triumph. But books about romantic relationships seem to make me uncomfortable.
I also loved Les Miserables and The Count of Monte Cristo. Two great novels involving great injustice, great suffering, but then great triumph!!!